While CES is generally not a big show for the GPU divisions of the major chip makers – those firms preferring to make major GPU announcements at their own events – due to the fact that CES itself aligns so closely with OEM refresh cycles, we do see some quieter GPU announcements come out of the show every year. In recent years this has especially been the case for laptop/mobile graphics thanks to the larger volume and higher levels of integration as found on those parts, though this does have the unfortunate side effect of meaning GPU announcements get caught up in the deluge of announcements coming out of CES. At any rate with our first 2014 discrete GPU announcements in hand, we’ll be starting our look at CES 2014 dGPU news with AMD’s first mobile product unveilings.

AMD Radeon M200 Series

For their 2014 mobile GPU series, AMD’s mobile GPU branding is being caught up with their desktop GPU branding. On the desktop AMD launched their new Radeon 200 series of products in Q4 of last year, and now at CES 2014 we’re seeing the launch of the mobile counterpart of the Radeon 200 brand, the Radeon M200 brand.

Meanwhile in what has quickly become a CES tradition if there ever was one, the lack of alignment between GPU development cycles and OEM refresh cycles means that we’re going to be starting off the year with a combination of new SKUs and rebadges of existing SKUs. For their product refreshes OEMs need new products to show off – whether or not new SKUs are truly available – leading to component suppliers such as AMD and NVIDIA playing the rebadge game to satisfy their OEM customers. The end result is that we get some “new” products that aren’t really new, a situation we’re not big fans of, but something that we have come to terms with for the OEM market.

Unlike CES 2013, AMD hasn’t held a press briefing for these mobile parts, and accordingly this is a far more tempered rollout than the nearly top-to-bottom 8000M rollout last year. Still, we already have published information for 2 M200 parts, and partial information for a third. If history is any indication there will be some more SKUs (and more rebadges) to further flesh out this lineup, but this is what AMD is officially starting with for the moment.

AMD Radeon M200 Series GPU Specification Comparison

AMD Radeon R9 M290X

AMD Radeon R7 M265

AMD Radeon R5 M230

Was

8970M

?

New

Stream Processors

1280

320

Texture Units

80

20

ROPs

32

4

Core Clock

850MHz

855MHz

Boost Clock

900MHz

N/A

Memory Clock

4.8GHz GDDR5

2GHz DDR3

Memory Bus Width

256-bit

64-bit

VRAM

2GB/4GB

Up To 4GB

FP64

1/16

?

Transistor Count

2.8B

?

GPU

Neptune (Pitcairn)

Sun

Manufacturing Process

TSMC 28nm

TSMC 28nm

TSMC 28nm

Architecture

GCN 1.0

GCN 1.?

GCN 1.0

Starting at the top we have the flagship of the group, the Radeon R9 M290X. The M290X is a straight-up rebadge of the 8970M (itself a minor variant of the 7970M), offering the same specifications and performance as the 8970M that came before it. This means we’re looking at a fully enabled Neptune (Pitcairn) GPU, with its 20 CUs and 32 ROPs running at a base clock of 850MHz with a boost clock of 900MHz. This is attached to 2GB or 4GB of GDDR5, running at 4.8GHz.

Since we’ll be starting 2014 on the same 28nm process node as 2013 (and 2012), there’s little surprise that AMD’s flagship hasn’t changed. AMD’s Tahiti GPU was too hot and power hungry for laptops and Hawaii is the same, so Neptune (Pitcairn) remains the largest GPU AMD can offer in this space.

Moving on to our second confirmed product, we have a new low end SKU called the R5 M230. The details on this one are a bit sketchier, as we know the functional unit counts and clockspeeds, but not the underlying GPU. In terms of performance this is a very low end part, featuring just 5 CUs (320 SPs), 4 ROPs, and a tiny 64bit DDR3 memory bus. AMD’s specs call for it to ship at clockspeeds up to 855MHz for the GPU and 2GHz for the DDR3 RAM, so shader performance and memory bandwidth should be competitive with the wider but lower clocked 8570M (Mars/Oland), but the ROP count is only half as much, which will hurt performance in pixel-heavy scenarios and higher resolutions. Functionally speaking this is a lower end part than any of the 8000M parts, and based on what we know about desktop Kaveri, unlikely to offer better performance than the iGPU in many Kaveri SKUs.

Meanwhile we also don’t have official confirmation on what GPU is in the R5 M230. Our initial assumption would be that this is another Mars (Oland) part, utilizing a cut down die. But AMD never offered such a product in the 8000M series. Furthermore Mars was 8 ROPs attached to a 64bit memory bus; while it’s easy enough to independently disable a CU, disabling ROPs without disabling part of the memory bus is an unusual endeavor. Sticking our arm into the rumor pool, we’ve heard rumors that AMD has developed another GCN GPU, mobile codename Sun, that’s even lower end than Mars. Seeing the number of functional units available on M230 this would certainly fit the description of Sun. For the moment we’re listing this as a Sun part, but we’re trying to chase down AMD to get confirmation of this.

Update: AMD has confirmed that the GPU is indeed Sun

Technical specifications aside, it’s not immediately clear what M230 is targeted at. With such a low performance profile, even in the best case it’s not going to be much faster than AMD’s iGPUs. At the same time it’s going to be rather big (relatively speaking) to pair with something like Kabini. It may be getting pitched as a cheap upgrade for Intel’s iGPUs, but that’s just a guess on our part.

AMD Roadmap Slide, Source: ComputerBase.de

Finally, we have a small bit of information on a 3rd AMD mobile SKU, whose full details have not been published yet. ComputerBase.de has a slide from an (unknown to us) AMD presentation that lists the R7 M265, which has yet to be posted by AMD. Since we don’t have specifications on this one we won’t spend too much time speculating on it, but there are really two ways this can go. Considering this replaces the 8700M series, this is either another Mars part, or we may finally be seeing a Bonaire part reach mobile. Heathrow (Cape Verde) was retired from AMD’s desktop lineup with the 200 series, and we’d expect the same to happen on the M200 series. In any case we’ll have more details on this SKU once AMD publishes some additional information on it.

but you forget that from 680m to 780m and to 880m: we see an amazing increase in performance. And if not for the top end cards but the mid range as well. And power usage is drasticly better...AMD on the other hand does...nothing interesting here.Reply